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Technically, I don't think it's correct usage, but might be what he's saying. (nm)

Posted By: clhmt on 2007-08-19
In Reply to: outliers. - clhmt

Subject: Technically, I don't think it's correct usage, but might be what he's saying. (nm)

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C3, 4, 5 correct usage
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correct usage of follow-up
Subject: correct usage of follow-up

Can someone please refresh me on the proper usage of follow up and follow-up?


thank you,


Cindi


Here is a question and answer from BOS showing the correct usage...sm
Subject: Here is a question and answer from BOS showing the correct usage...sm

Select the correct choice for each of the


following sentences.


 


      The patient will (follow up, followup) next week.


      The (follow up, followup) x-ray was negative.


      The patient was seen today in (follow up, followup). 


ANSWERS:


The patient will follow up next week.


The followup x-ray was negative.


The patient was seen today in followup. 


Page 172. 


BOS covers the correct usage of these words. I'm not sure why it was included, but I'm glad i
Subject: BOS covers the correct usage of these words. I'm not sure why it was included, but I'm glad it was!


Technically, yes
Subject: Technically, yes

it would be typed as you have it with the commas, but I think the meaning is still clear without them.
Technically...
Subject: Technically...

defervescence (past tense defervesced) means "abatement of fever" but MD's usually use it pertaining to the patient generally getting better or doing better, so I would say OK.
Technically it would not because
Subject: Technically it would not because

our system is not metric and based on units of 10. But apparently not all docs are math geniuses, but it's just the kind of thing some docs will get bent out of shape out of, so some accounts will actually specify you do it as dictated. Grrr.


Technically, DC is one of those
Subject: Technically, DC is one of those

dangerous abbreviations, type out discontinue or discharge whichever is applicable. In this case, discontinued.
Technically can mean "medical officer of the day"
Subject: Technically can mean "medical officer of the day"


diaphragm paresis, although technically
Subject: diaphragm paresis, although technically

should be diaphragmatic paralysis.  Maybe doc is like so many other doctors that think just because they have gone through 8 years of medical school that it gives them license to make up words.  Boy, are we grossly underpaid!!
If he is an alcoholic in rehab, technically
Subject: If he is an alcoholic in rehab, technically

he is probably not drinking at the moment, but agree it could have been worded a whole lot clearer.
They're both accepted but technically it's BI-RADS. nm
Subject: They're both accepted but technically it's BI-RADS. nm

:)
Technically it would be q.24h, but I spell it out to avoid problems. EOM
Subject: Technically it would be q.24h, but I spell it out to avoid problems. EOM


odontoid technically just means shaped like a tooth
Subject: odontoid technically just means shaped like a tooth

sessamoid could be found in hand or could be skipping and saying rheumatoid.
echocardiogram - A very technically difficult study. Images 'without' or 'out of' axis
Subject: echocardiogram - A very technically difficult study. Images 'without' or 'out of' axis sm

Do either of these make sense?  He cuts off a lot of his words and I've never heard this phrase before.


Images out of axis?  Images without axis?


TIA


never heard of this usage...
Subject: never heard of this usage...

She is hesitant about getting a mammogram because she has had difficult experiences with them in the past.  I gave her a prescription and suggested that she get it done at the same place she had it done last year and her s/l PLATE will have records and it will not be quite so annoying.  Thank you
another usage. see inside.
Subject: another usage. see inside.

A flex-x of the c-spine x-ray was obtained today.  If the "x" stands for x-ray??


Preferred usage
Question:  When typing mammos which is the perferred.  9 o'clock position or 9:00 position. 
Comma usage
Subject: Comma usage

For a diagnosis of pelvic adnexal and omental adhesions, would you place a comma between pelvic and adnexal or not? 


Would it be: 


Pelvic adnexal and omental adhesions


or


Pelvic, adnexal and omental adhesions? 


I'm thinking no comma is needed, but the more I think on it, the more confused I become.  The adnexa are within the pelvis, and no comma is needed, right?


word usage
Subject: word usage


  • This is form one Look Dic:

  • Nowhere is listed that 'proofed' can be used, only 'proofread'. Proof can be used as a noun or as an adejctive, not as a verb.

  • 1. proof -- (make or take a proof of, such as a photographic negative, an etching, or typeset)
  • 2. proof -- (knead to reach proper lightness; ``proof dough'' )
  • 3. proofread, proof -- (read for errors; ``I should proofread my manuscripts'' )
  • 4. proof -- (activate by mixing with water and sometimes sugar or milk; ``proof yeast'' )
  • 5. proof -- (make resistant (to harm); ``proof the materials against shrinking in the dryer'' )


Number Usage
I have spelled out numbers lower than 10 for 30 years, until now that is.  The QA personnel for the company I just started working for keep changing the spelled out word to a number (no matter where it is in the report and how it is used). Example:  He has been having problems over the last six months (they changed to 6 months).  This goes against everything I ever learned in 12 years of Catholic schools.  Ugh!  Is this according to the AAMT guidelines or is it there way of saving a penny here and there?
word usage
Subject: word usage

Is it "redose" or "re-dose" the medication?
"as well as" usage
Subject: "as well as" usage

I have a dictator that constantly uses "as well as" in the following manner:
"The patient is treated for a variety of issues including hyperlipidemia, hypertension, LVH, as well as generalized risk factor modification."
Shouldn't there be an "and" before LVH to make "as well as" work in this sentence? I read that "as well as" does not mean "and" - any help?
TIA
Usage of apostrophes......sm
Subject: Usage of apostrophes......sm

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Mavis's job
Charles's salary
Davy Jones's locker
Keeping up with the Joneses
Marx's writing
Berlioz's music
Cervantes's novels
Jesus's teachings
Moses's triumph
Euripides's plays
Venus's statue
Mars's children
Ajax's sword


Some of these are pronounced with an awkward "zuziz" or "eeziz" sound so some people prefer to drop the final s, and some guides allow this "for classical names ending in s", which would thus have Venus' statue but Venus's tennis serve. It seems illogical to restrict it to classical names, so I feel Cervantes' novels would also be acceptable. Personally, I use 's in every case (so Jesus's writings) or avoid the problem by using the novels of Cervantes.



word usage
Is it chondromalacia patella even when referring to only one knee? I was corrected on this for using patella.
Think they mean annealed but the usage is really incorrect here. nm
Subject: Think they mean annealed but the usage is really incorrect here. nm

s
word usage questions
Subject: word usage questions

There has not been any interval change in his exam. 


 


I am questioning the use of the word interval in this context.  For a time, I thought the doctor was saying integral, but it is clear now that he is not.  Is interval the correct word to use when there have been no changes in the patient's exam from one visit to the next?


BOS says in pronoun or common usage..sm
Subject: BOS says in pronoun or common usage..sm

numbers get spelled out - "...previous x-rays versus the most recent one." "His symptoms went from one extreme to the other." The trend is toward using arabic numerals unless your client or QA insists on it. Ages, too, are always in number form. ...BOS II pages 278/279. ....nm

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Comma Usage... see message
Subject: Comma Usage... see message

doctor: the patient presented rectal bleeding, heme-positive stools as well as proctalgia.


how will I transcribe this correctly:


The patient presented with rectal bleeding and heme-positive stools as well as proctalgia.


                           or


The patient presented with rectal bleeding,heme-positive stools, as well as proctalgia.


 


help me please..


Help with word usage delima???
Subject: Help with word usage delima???

Dictated: The foot was prepped, Hibiclensed and draped in usual sterile fashion.


would you recast the sentence? My QA suggested that it should be transcribed "The foot was prepped, Hibiclens and draped in usual sterile fashion."


This doesn't make sense to me because the foot cannot be Hibiclens. I had typed it as dictated per our guidlines on dictator style, and i have .75% off my QA score on it. 


Does anybody have suggestions? How should it be transcribed??


~Trying to learn as fast as I can~  


 


Terminology/usage questions...please advise
Subject: Terminology/usage questions...please advise

Okay, the dictator says "subcu". So, I type "subcu" because it is a verbatim account.

QA changed it to "subq". I challenge this and the advisor I asked said that AAMT BOS says "subcu" but never "subq".

Then comes along a spider (oh, excuse me, supervisor) who screams at me because, HE states, we should NEVER use "subcu"..we should always figure out which one is meant and ALWAYS spell it out. I said I don't see that written anywhere and this is a verbatim account.

He states no one anyone, no matter what the customer says, should type things like cath, subcu, alk phos, preop, tib-fib, etc.

Do any of you type those things? I just want to know the simple answer. I believe the advisor I asked because they showed me in the BOS where it was.

I think he's too uptight, lol.

I wasn't familiar with that term/usage, and it does seem to be wrong
Subject: I wasn't familiar with that term/usage, and it does seem to be wrong

I didn't look up "deverts," but for advert:

Quick definitions (advert)

# noun: a public promotion of some product or service
# verb: make reference to
# verb: give heed (to)
# verb: make a more or less disguised reference to

I would have thought it would be: "She refused treatment because she is averse to blood draws."
need help w/2 drugs, s/l thermadon and s/l knee-po-tir? They are just in a list no dosages or usage
Subject: need help w/2 drugs, s/l thermadon and s/l knee-po-tir? They are just in a list no dosages or usage


Stressed sunblock usage "for good lygo"
Subject: Stressed sunblock usage "for good lygo"

This doctor likes to mention everything in his plans, from all the vaccinations/testing needed in the next decade to sunblock usage, selt belts and smoke alarms. 


 


Stressed sunblock usage "for good lygo"
Subject: Stressed sunblock usage "for good lygo"

This doctor likes to mention everything in his plans, from all the vaccinations/testing needed in the next decade to sunblock usage, selt belts and smoke alarms. 


 The only things that I know about the patient is that he is overweight, has dry mouth and sees a rheumatoligist on a regular basis.


that's what I was thinking too, but it was a weird usage of a word that didn't make sense for
Subject: that's what I was thinking too, but it was a weird usage of a word that didn't make sense for that

meaning.  He could have just said "dc'd".
actually tar IS a natural product usage for psoriasis and tar baths, though I agree topical regimen
Subject: actually tar IS a natural product usage for psoriasis and tar baths, though I agree topical regimen sounds like an RX

d
I meant it would be correct, not I would be correct..nm
Subject: I meant it would be correct, not I would be correct..nm

nm
correct, you are!
holy crap! Thank God I didn't type incense (hee hee)
You must have been doing this a long time.
I would correct it, very different!
Subject: I would correct it, very different!

A distention of the abdomen resulting from the accumulation of gas or air in the intestine or peritoneal cavity. Also called tympany. (tympanitic)

1. Relating to or resembling a drum.
2. also tym·pa·nal (tmp-nl) Anatomy. Of or relating to the middle ear or eardrum. (tympanic)

it's not what we think, it is what is correct...
Subject: it's not what we think, it is what is correct...

correct = nicked (verb: to cut nick into)

onelook.com is a good dictionary source on-line.
Were is correct.
Subject: Were is correct.

As the word remainder represents a portion, the verb to use is determined by the noun in the "of phrase" that follows. In your case, "forms" is plural so use were.

This rule also applies for other "portion" words such as none, all, some, part, etc. Hope this helps.

PS: See 'The Blue Book of Grammar and Punctuation' by Jane Straus.

xx


Which is correct?
Subject: Which is correct?

Is it typed Adacel or ADACEL?


-thank you-


Which is correct? Help!
Subject: Which is correct? Help!

Could someone tell me which is correct? Do you hyphenate these sentences?


He was given a one day's notice.


She was given a ten days' notice.


What is the rule about using hyphens with written numbers? I have tried looking it up and can't seem to get a clear answer on this..


Thanks!


 


 


THIS IS CORRECT!!!
Subject: THIS IS CORRECT!!!

:)
Correct!
Subject: Correct!

:)
That might be correct...sm
Subject: That might be correct...sm

but I notified my QA person that I might not have heard it clearly. She said he definitely said normetanephrine and metanephrin. This group of doctors says to "type exactly what I say". So right or wrong - that is what he said!
QA says it is correct -- SM
Subject: QA says it is correct -- SM

They say TELAMET but it is in clinical history and all caps on this account so I dont know if it is a capitalized word or not.